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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1910)
THE MORXEfG OEEGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1910. 13 Vassar Union Suitsfor Men-Cooper, Carter, Merode, Dr. Deimel's Linen Mesh Underwear-Onyx Hosiery Keil Kites Royal Worcester, Bon Ton, Warner Rust Proof, Mine. Helerie, Red fern Corsets-Howd and Le Beau Front Lace Corsets Ofl(ds-W'orto Store 1,000,000 Removal SMe Sdl Weefc of unr "IWiie " WMtte TDzzys" Greater iSlilli $i. 2QQ Trimmed Hats $9.00 Valxaes $3.95 A display which embraces a particularly brilliant line of moderately priced Hata. Quali ty is the special feature ; we are sure yon will find the styles es pecially interesting1. The shapes are of the latest vogue. Trimmed in flowers, quills, rib bons, laces, silks, fruits, foliage, etc. A collection of200, all new; values to $9. rfQ rr Removal price, ea. J)Q7J QO Souvenir Book A very special offering of Souvenir Books, containing views of Portland and the Columbia River. Handsome illustrations; size 6x9 pictures. Send one to the folks back home. They will appreciate it. Regular$1.00 values, now4lC POSTCARD ALBUMS that hold 200 cards, covered with black or green cloth; extra fine quality of leaves. Our r regular 50c values; special during Carnival week at J. 5 C $2 Wash Lace Veils at 69c $2.5Q Auto Veils at $1.48 Wash Veils A -very exceptional special in Wash Lace Veils, full l1? yards long, all the very new, dainty designs for Summer wear; our regular values up to $2 each, removal sale, "June White CQ Days" price, special, each OSC ATJTO VEILS of an extra quality chiffon, full two yards long and one yard wide, hemstiched all around; all the new wanted shades. Priced so low you can afford to have a few extra ' ones for your guests; worth regular tfjl f Q $2.50, special price, ea. P "0 Regular 15c Lunch. Sets 7c Lunch Sets, consisting of picnic box, three crepe napkins, 6 sheets of high-grade wax paper, 1 salt, 1 pepper envelope. Put up in collapsible packages. Just the thing for picnics, yacht ing, automobile and driving trips. Don't be without several setB in the house. The handiest and best 15c values, Special Removal Sale price at this very low figure, set C 4Qc Dresden Ribbon 25c 65c Hair Bow Ribbon 29c DRESDEN RIBBON, your selec tion of a large variety of pretty ribbons, in warp print Dresden ef fects 4 to 5 inches wide; a broad range of patterns to choose from; worth 40c a yard, at this OP special removal sale price 3C HAIR BOW RIBBONS in rich quality plain taffeta, moire taffeta and lustrous satin taffeta, in 5yz to 614-inch widths; black, white and all colors; worth to 65c OQ a yard, removal sale price $125o Taffeta Pettic'ts $42i The Garment Store offers for Car- nival week a line "of rich, lustrous Taffeta Silk. Petticoats, in black, white and all colors; also Dresden patterns ; cut full with deep flounce, trimmed in bands, lucks, plaits, etc, Values to $12.50, dur- M ing this sale for only U,"Q Rose Carnival Programme for Wednesday, J vine 8 Morning Grand award . of prizes in competitive rose exhibit, at the Arm ory building, given by Rose Society. Afternoon Parade of decorated au tomobiles. Rose exhibit at Armory. Evening Society Circus on Multno mah Field. Pain's Battle of Monitor and Merrimac at Oaks Park. Formal closing of rose exhibit at the Armory. a r nival Parasol 25c The official Carnival Parasol. Top decorated in rose designs. Good, strong bamboo frames- and handles. Japanese styles. Very novel street or automobile parasols. Splendid Rose Carnival souvenirs. Priced very special at, each 25c All 50c Ties Are Offered At3for$LOO Now, men, here's your chance to stock up in fine seasonable Neckwear. Your unrestricted choice of any Four-in- Hand, Teck, Bow or Batwing Tie in our store, such as we sell regularly at 50c, is priced for Carnival week at 3 for $1, or 1 for only 35c Men's $5 Oxfords Reduced to $2.98 LOT 14 Another strong item is added to our Re moval Sale specials. Lot 14 comprises Men's High Grade Oxfords ir, tans, patents and gunmetals.medium and straight lasts, freak toes and comfort styles. complete line of sizes. This lot embraces our regular lines, $4 and $5 values, for $2.98 v 4 M rf r jfrr caie oi men s rWrVi At 95c Each Your choice of 1500 high-grade Colored Shirts for men. Very select patterns in coat style or golf shirts, with, or with out cuffs attached. If you like snap and vim a-plenty, you will surelyfind them in this lot. These are regular stock values; good sellers at fr $1.50. Removal Sale price, ea. "OC Men's $5 Oxfords And Shoes $2.39 LOT 13 Men's Oxfords and Shoes, a big assortment, made up of odd lines and broken sizes in tans and black leathers in a collection of shapes and styles suf ficient to please most any man who wants a good shoe. Not a pair in the lot is worth less than $3.50 and up to $5. Special Removal price $2.39 SaleWom'n's 35c Hose for Only 18c Pair A remarkable clean-up of Women's Hosiery. Black lace stockings, white lace stockings, plain black cotton hose with ma co foot. Plain tan cotton hose, solid black cotton hose, fast colors and good wearers; good val- ues to 35c a pr. Removal price luC Children's Regular 25c Hose 5c Pair Determined to clean up our stock of Infants' and Children's Stockings. Here's a lot of allover lace hose, seam less foot, guaranteed fast black; sizes 4 to 9. Splendid every day and school hose. ' Parents should take advantage of this offer of values to 25c i a pair. Special Removal price Q C $45.QO Tailored Siits $17.65 This lot comprises 350 of our yery best stylesjtn serges, jKagonals, wide wales, sackcloths, mannish materials and fancy mixtures. The jackets are styled in the medium length, semi or tight-fitting. The plain colored notch collars or shawl collars, faced with silks or self materials ; some are nicely trimmed; two or three-button styles. The skirts are all plaited in the very latest approved fashions. A broad range of colors to choose from; all sizes in the lot. These are all our regular stock suits. We have taken 350 of our best values - rr to $45.00 and priced them special for Carnival Week at the extremely low price of, the suit U 1 76 5 Women's $10 White Lingerie Dress $4.95 A lot of 150 nure white lingerie 9 Dresses, made of finest quality lawn or Batiste materials, daint ily trimmed in laces or em- broideries; plaited and tucked styles. A strong feature of this offering is the unusually good assortment of styles and the perfect workmanship. Take ad vantage, come early for these. Vals. to $10, June White Days' price $4.95 Lace Cxirtains Iow Priced A special purchase of Mill Ends, 3 yards in a strip, represent ing the largest collection of patterns we have ever shown. Lace or novelty nets in all the new block and stripe effects. Several of a kind for those who want pairs. Sizes just right to cut up or for full-length curtains. Don't miss this great bargain event. $1.25 to $2.50 values, special for this sale 75 to $ 1.50 each. $2.25 to $4.50 values, special this sale $1.50 to $2725 each! $2.25 Corset Cover $1.Q9 $4.00 Petticoats at $1.98 CORSET COVERS of finest qual ity nainsook, made with yokes of swiss embroidery with beautiful medallion insets, Valenciennes lace edge with insertion to match; our regular stock values to jj 1 "C $2.25; very special for plViS PETTICOATS of excellent quality white cambric, cut very full in the body, styled with full 16-in. flounce with wide edge of embroidery 01 lace, insertions to match; excellent values to $4.03, "June 4J- QQ White Days" price, ea. P X HO v m ill ill 5Qc to $1 Back Combs 25c 500 Back Combs, gold inlaid and fancy back, set with jewels and Rhinestones; all the new and latest novelties in design. Don't fail to see them. The values are exceptionally good at 50c to $1.00. During Removaialepriced at 3C HAIRPINS Our entire stocks of braid hairpins, all extra fine miallTT CminAtll MAt-fAA finloll .linll a. 1 TT1... that find ready sale at 50c to 75c each. Special, each j,i)C 35c Fancy Neckwear 18c 65c Fancy Neckwear 29c CARNIVAL SPECIAL 2500 pes. of sample Neckwear, some slightly mussed, but all advance styles, in cluding jabots, Dutch collars with or without jabots, side ruffles, stock collars and stocks; excellent values to 35c; very special "I June "White Days price, ea. OC NECKWEAR, in every conceivable shape and style that's new; jabots, Dutch collars, stock collars, etc.; also a very complete assortment of belts; our regular stock val- OQ ues to 65c each sale ririee u I s--ssapssss PRECEDENT IS FEARED 6PECIAL, RATES UPHELD BY WASHINGTON HIGH COtTtT. logging Company's Contract Made in Exchange for Abandoning Construction of Roads. OLTSJPIA. Wt h., June 7. (Special.) The , present decision of the State Supreme Court holding valid a special contract by the Great Northern giving the Sultan Railway & Lumber Com pany' special rates on loss from Sul tan to Everett Is said to be in direct ronflict with a decision of the Federal Supreme Court In one of the Important rases in which the beef trust was prose cuted successfully for securing; favored railroad rates. Some persons fear that under the State Court decision, unless it is modi fled, all sorts of special and favored rrftes and discriminations may result. There is little doubt that a petition for a rehearing .will be nled. i The Sultan Company proposed build ing a logging road which would cross the Great Northern tracks. Great Northern officials agreed that if the logging company would not build the Great Northern would make a special rate of $1 a thousand feet for hauling the company's logs from Sultan to Everett. Then the Great Northern fired with the State Railway Commis sion a tariff establishing a rate of 12.60 a thousand for logs from Sultan to Everett and demanded that the Sul tan company pay the higher rate. The Sultan company refused to do so and brought this suit to compel the Great Northern to' haul at the low rate. The State Supreme Court held that the con tract was valk) and enforcable. It is contended that under that de cision, for instance, the Standard Oil Company could threaten to build a line competing with the Great Northern across the state and demand and re ceive a special rate for hauling its oil in consideration of not constructing a parallel 'line, and that other favored rates could be secured. The - decision of the United States Supreme Court was not cited in this case nor brought to the attention of the State Court, but is said to be clearly In point. The Armour Packing Company entered into a contract with a railroad for a term of years for a certain rate for its products from Kan sas City to New York. At the time the ' contract was entered into the Eastern lines had a 27-cent rate from Mississippi River points to New York and the contract rate used this figure as part of the amount fixed for the contract rate. Soon afterward the Eastern roads increased rates. The Armours demanded that the contract rate and no more be charged and the railroads agreed. Prosecution was in stituted by the Federal authorities on charge of demanding and receiving re bates or rates below the published tar iff. The Armours set up the contract as a defense and the Supreme Court held the contract, being not in con formity with published rates, was void. WOMEN ANNOYED BY MAN Police Looking for Person Wearing Long Coat and Little Else. A mysterious man, probably demented or a degenerate, is reported to be accost ing and annoying women on the Bast Side, numerous reports having been made of misconduct on his part. He is said to wear a long overcoat, with no clothing under it. Sunday morning, a woman re ported that the man passed and repassed her in the neighborhood of the Dominican Church on Union avenue and made sug gestive gestures. She described him as a man with a very large nose and said that his coat was fastened at the bottom with a shoestring. Other complaints of the same man have come in from Twenty-second and Everett streets and from Grand, near Hawthorne avenue. The police are on the lookout for him. VETO IS UP FOR VOTE MAYOR MAY BE SUSTAINED IX SEWER-PIPE FIGHT. but made no recommendation as to the O. R. & N. Efforts of Terra Cotta "Trust" to Control Local Field Will Probably Be Defeated. Mayor Simon's veto of the terra cotta sewer pipe ordinance will be one of the principal features of today's session of the City Council. It is believed that it will be sustained, as the vote for the measure at the last session was eight to six, with one absent, and it requires ten votes to pass an ordinance over the ob jection of the Mayor. Efforts by the terra cotta "trust" to control the local field and to hold It for its exclusive use brought about one of the hardest fights ever witnessed in the Council. Tt now looks.. however, as if the field will be held open to competition. Cement pipe is now seeking entrance to Portland, a company having been organ ized and a factory built at Kenton for the purpose of supplying this kind of pipe. Owing to the fact that it is cheaper than terra cotta. Mayor Simon has been from the start its firm friend. The terra cotta pipe manufacturers and their friends in the Council and elsewhere have attacked cement pipe on the ground that it is porous and will not be sanitary. Demonstrations held here have disproved this to the satisfaction of the Mayor, and Monday he filed his veto of the "trust" ordi nance, which prohibits the use of any but terra cotta pipe. It is probable that some action will be taken by the Council relative to the Broadway bridge, especially as to the street vacations sought by the O. R. & N. Company on the East Side. The spe cial committee which made its report at the last session recommended the acceptance of the proposal of the Northern Pacific Terminal Company, PRETTY GIRL' GOES TO JAIL Young Woman Takes Money From Slan in South End Cafe. Clara veyman, young and comely, was sentenced to 60 days' imprisonment in the City Jail yesterday by Judge Bennett on a charge of vagrancy. The woman was arrested by Patrolman Montgomery on a complaint of Arthur Thompson that she had relieved him of J15 In a South End cafe. The woman said she came here from Berkeley, Cal., looking for work and said that when she failed to find employment she took to frequenting the cafes. After her arrest, she telephoned to a sister in Seattle to ask for money and when the sister inquired what she was arrested for she answered, "Oh, you know what." It was agreed by the complaining wit ness that If the woman would return the money, lie would not prosecute and she thereupon repaid him, but the police re fused to be a party to the agreement, and pressed the vagrancy charge, on which she was convicted. Her true name is said to be Maggie Chamberlain. Fruit Trees Require Propping. 8UTHERLIN, Or.. June 7. (Special.) The prospects for a large fruit crop in Sutherlin Valley are bright. Prune, peach and pear trees already require propping because of the weipht of fruit upon them. Jessie Shambrook has1 sold his prune crop In advance. "jiii':wiimnnii?JiiiiiiiuMiiiii;a:',iHi'Lmi;fflttniiiiMiBi M Most Delicious Vanilla Sauce Boil one cupful of cream with one tablespoonful of sugar; while hot, stir in the yokes of three eggs and then add one teas poo nful of Burnett's Vanilla. Serve hot One bottlo of BURNETT'S VANILLA will convince yon of its superiority over ordinary kinds. Insist on getting the one bottle. SndroariuiMud addrs "end we wgl a J ygu, FREE, thirty orisuud tartad recipe, ef aelicioas dainri Mtlx od economically prepared. You will set new ideas from this FREE fcoelb Send for it MOW. JOSEPH BURNETT COMPART, tt hs SU T7Q R ANYONE who finds any injurious ' substances in food resultant from the of Crescent Baking Powder. This is a standing offer of many years duration, which has never yet been challenged. It is one of the guarantees that goes with every can of Crescent Baking Powder sold by your grocer. Remember that Crescent Baking Powder has been on the market for many years and, in the face of the enormous opposition of the Cream of Tartar Trusts, it is speedily winning its way into the good graces of every modern housewife and pure food critic. izrsss- ' -tA.iii;rnn. -vat ez. - - - . - t 0.. UUK.-'H. C. .-"4 . i ------ 4.'- A W. The malic ious attacks of the Cream of Tar tar Trusts to dis credit the superior qualities of egg-phosphate baking powder be ignored. . Dr. Moreau Morris of the New York Board of Health, says; It may be that I am a little predjadiced. but I think I express the consensus of opinion of the medical profession when 1 say that Rochelle Salts (cream of tartar) should never be used by a person except by a physician's advice. Its continued use induces a very unhealthy con dition of the stomach and especially of the bowels, and finally produces constipation of as aggravated type." And the XI- S. Drpaxtment of Axrictilttire at Washington. D. C sts: "A loef ef bread made from a Quart of flour leavened with cream of tartar baking powder con tains forty-five more grams of Rochelle Salts than is coatained in one Sedlits powder. Crescent Egg-Phospfudc Baking Powder sells for 25c, Is absolutely pore and wholesome. It is guaranteed and made by the Crescent Mfg. Co., Seattle, manufacturers of Maplelne, the new flavor. t.-i .'Aa &;-".- ..v' -41 tT